SNIFF vs WHIFF: NOUN
- A brief perception
- Sensing an odor by inhaling through the nose
- A quantity of something that is inhaled through the nose
- An instance of sniffing.
- The act of sniffing; perception by sniffing; that which is taken by sniffing.
- The sound produced by passing the breath through the nose with a quick effort; a short, quick snuffle.
- Perception of smell obtained by inhaling audibly; that which is taken by sniffing: as, a sniff of fresh air.
- The act of sniffing; a single short audible inspiration through the nose.
- Something sniffed or perceived by or as if by sniffing; a whiff.
- An instance or the sound of sniffing.
- A strikeout resulting from the batter swinging at and missing the ball for the third strike
- A lefteye flounder found in coastal waters from New England to Brazil
- A short light gust of air
- An odour carried briefly through the air
- A waft; a brief, gentle breeze; a light gust of air
- The marysole, or sail fluke.
- A glimpse; a hasty view.
- A sudden expulsion of air from the mouth; a quick puff or slight gust, as of air or smoke.
- At Oxford and other places on the Thames, a light kind of outrigger boat.
- A hasty view; a glimpse; a gliff.
- A sudden expulsion of air, smoke, or the like from the mouth; a puff.
- A quick inhalation of air, and especially of smoke; a drawing or drinking; in of smoke; also, a draught or drink, as of wine or liquid.
- A slight blast or gust of air; especially, a puff of air conveying some smell.
- A short inhalation of breath, especially of smoke from a cigarette or pipe
- A strikeout.
- A slight sign of something
- A strike (from the batter’s perspective)
- The megrim, a fish with scientific name Lepidorhombus boscii or Lepidorhombus whiffiagonis
- A slight, gentle gust of air; a waft.
- An inhalation, as of air or smoke.
- A very small trace.
- A brief, passing odor carried in the air.
- An anacanthine or malacopterygious fish of the family Pleuronectidæ, a kind of flatfish or flounder, the Cynicoglossus microcephalus, found in British waters; the smear-dab, sail-fluke, or marysole.
SNIFF vs WHIFF: ADJECTIVE
- N/A
- Having a strong or unpleasant odor.
SNIFF vs WHIFF: VERB
- Inhale audibly through the nose
- To make a short, audible inhalation, through the nose, as if to smell something.
- To say something while sniffing, for example in case of illness or unhappiness
- To perceive vaguely
- To be dismissive or contemptuous of something.
- Perceive by inhaling through the nose
- To waft.
- To sniff.
- To strike out.
- To attempt to strike and miss, especially being off-balance/vulnerable after missing.
- Drive or carry as if by a puff of air
- Utter with a puff of air
- Strike out by swinging and missing the pitch charged as the third
- Perceive by inhaling through the nose
- Smoke and exhale strongly
SNIFF vs WHIFF: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To draw air audibly up the nose; to snuff; -- sometimes done as a gesture of suspicion, offense, or contempt.
- To utter in a contemptuous or haughty manner.
- To perceive or detect by or as if by sniffing.
- To inhale forcibly through the nose.
- To pry; snoop.
- To regard something in a contemptuous or dismissive manner.
- To use the sense of smell, as in savoring or investigating.
- To sniffle.
- To inhale a short, audible breath through the nose, as in smelling something.
- To strike out (a batter).
- To strike out. Used of a batter.
- To swing at and miss a ball or puck.
- To be carried in brief gusts; waft.
- To emit whiffs, as of smoke; to puff.
- To inhale through the nose; sniff.
SNIFF vs WHIFF: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To perceive as by sniffing; to snuff, to scent; to smell.
- To throw out in whiffs; to consume in whiffs; to puff.
- To carry or convey by a whiff, or as by a whiff; to puff or blow away.
SNIFF vs WHIFF: OTHER WORD TYPES
- To draw air through the nose in short audible inspirations, as an expression of scorn; snuff: often with at.
- To draw in with the breath through the nose; smell of with an audible inhalation; snuff: as, to sniff the fragrance of a clover-field.
- To perceive as by snuffing; smell; scent: as, to sniff danger.
- To draw the breath through (the nose) in an unpleasantly audible manner.
- To fish, as for mackerel, with a hand-line. See whiffing, n.
- To puff; blow; produce or emit a puff or whiff.
- To drink.
- To puff; puff out; exhale; blow: as, to whiff out rings of smoke.
- To carry as by a slight blast or whiff of wind.
- To draw in; imbibe; inhale: said of air or smoke, and frequently of liquids also.
SNIFF vs WHIFF: RELATED WORDS
- Reek, Waft, Stink, Sniffer, Scent, Snuffle, Stickers, Track, Feel, Trace, Snort, Smell, Sniffle, Snuff, Whiff
- Breath, Inkling, Stink, Odor, Taste, Aroma, Waft, Stench, Smells, Scent, Smell, Hint, Puff of air, Puff, Sniff
SNIFF vs WHIFF: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Reek, Waft, Stink, Sniffer, Scent, Snuffle, Stickers, Track, Feel, Trace, Snort, Smell, Sniffle, Snuff, Whiff
- Touch, Smoke, Breath, Stink, Odor, Taste, Aroma, Waft, Stench, Smells, Scent, Smell, Hint, Puff, Sniff
SNIFF vs WHIFF: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Sniff out how different cultures name their pets.
- Was it a Joe Bidenesque Freudian slip sniff?
- WUP messages at different time slots of a sniff interval, wherein the sniff interval is a time interval between two consecutive WUP messages.
- Module will goes into power save after serving a sniff anchor point, and wakes up before starting a sniff anchor point.
- Alternately, you can simply sniff straight from the bottle or put a dot on your palm and sniff from your palm.
- Nowadays, dogs are specially trained to sniff out these mushrooms as they are trained to sniff any other drug.
- Two parametthe slave: the sniff attempt and the sniff timeout.
- Note that Nsniff attempt sniff timeoutat the sniff anchor point, irrefrom the master.
- Conversely, a drugdog sniff conducted after an otherwisecompleted traffic stop is unconstitutional absent independent reasonable suspicion for the sniff.
- RATING MODES SELECTING SNIFF PARAMETERS When using sniff for power savings a few things must be considered.
- One big whiff made a believer out of him.
- Denoted by a golden color highlighting their whiff total.
- Better yet, hopefully the next try is a whiff.
- Scientists Try to Reconcile Adam and Eve Story, Whiff.
- And then he caught a whiff of national popularity.
- Whiff: A player swings yet misses the ball.
- On Friday, stock investors caught a whiff, too.
- We get a whiff of international political intrigue.
- That Moment, at first whiff, is incredibly fresh.
- Cheery disregard for social norms; tendency to overreact; horrendous taste in clothing; slight whiff of redneckery; slight whiff generally.
SNIFF vs WHIFF: QUESTIONS
- Can I sniff for packets on a port without localhost?
- Is a sniff-induced negative pressure in the ear pathological?
- Is it safe to sniff out chemicals from open containers?
- Why do people in Tanzania sniff food before eating?
- What do you sniff during a Jewish wedding ceremony?
- Can dogs sniff out the smell of decomposing bodies?
- Do police drug dogs sniff people at music festivals?
- Why do young people in central Australia Sniff Petrol?
- Did Callaway pass the sniff test with taylortaylormade?
- Can Labrador Retrievers sniff out counterfeit DVDs?
- Should you Whiff on a big name player in a dynasty League?
- Is an early whiff in fantasy football worse than in baseball?
- How many swings per pitch type do MLB starters whiff in 2020?